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Your Position: Home - Machinery - Single Stage vs. Two Stage Air Compressors

Single Stage vs. Two Stage Air Compressors

Single Stage vs. Two Stage Air Compressors


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Some air compressors come in two types: single and two-stage. When it comes to buying a single-stage or dual-stage air compressor, the first question that prospective buyers often ask is, “What are the differences between the two?”

 

 

View Single & Two Stage Compressors

 

What Is a Single-Stage Air Compressor?

Single-stage compressors draw air into a machine with pistons. The air moves through a filter and then passes through intake valves into a cylinder. The pistons push the air up, helping to compress it as it pushes through the exhaust valves.

Single-stage compressors are also known as piston compressors. The process that takes place within a single-stage compressor goes as follows:

  • Air is sucked into a cylinder
  • The trapped air is compressed in a single stroke with a piston at roughly 120 psi
  • The compressed air is moved onward to a storage tank

In the storage tank, the compressed air serves as energy for the assortment of tools that a single-stage compressor is built to accommodate.

What Is a Two-Stage Air Compressor?

Two-stage, or dual-stage air compressors, use a larger piston to draw air in. They also use less pressure than a single-stage air compressor, at least during the first part of the process.

Dual-stage air compressors have an additional step. Once the air gets compressed, it doesn’t move to a storage tank. Instead, it gets drawn into a second cylinder and compressed again. From there, it moves into a storage tank.

What Is The Difference Between A Single Stage and Two Stage Air Compressor?



The main difference between single- and two-stage compressors is the number of times that air gets compressed between the inlet valve and the tool nozzle. In a single-stage compressor, the air is compressed one time; in a two-stage compressor, the air is compressed twice for double the pressure.

The process within a two-stage compressor is similar to that of a single-stage, but with one variation: the compressed air isn’t sent to a storage tank; it’s instead sent to a smaller piston for a second stroke, this time at roughly 175 psi. From there, the double-pressurized air is cooled and delivered to a storage tank, where it serves as energy for vast arsenals of high-powered equipment.

 

How Many Compressor Stages Do I Have?

People who are new to air compressors will often confuse the number of cylinders for the number of stages in an air compressor, when in fact, both single- and two-stage compressors use two cylinders because it’s easier to balance air that way.

You can tell how many stages your air compressor has based on the size of the cylinders and the number of air intakes. On a single-stage compressor, all cylinders will be the same size and have their own inlet valves. On the other hand, in two-stage compressors, there is only one inlet, and the second piston is shorter than the first, and the two are linked by a cooling tube, which brings the temperature of the air down before the second round of compression.

Single-stage air compressors are often small units that can easily be transported from one room to another. By contrast, multi-stage compressors are typically larger and somewhat heavier.

Uses for Single-Stage Air Compressors

For the independent craftsperson, a single-stage compressor will power a variety of handheld pneumatic tools that don’t exceed 100 psi.

Out of all the activities that a person could do in their garage or backyard, few are as tool-intensive as woodworking. From cutting and sawing to sanding, drilling and nailing, there’s a vital tool being used along every step of the way, regardless of whether you’re making furniture, canoes or living room fixtures. Some of the tools used in these steps can be quite intensive in that they require a lot of physical exertion. As such, woodworking involves a certain degree of physical stamina, as well as hand-eye coordination.

However, for all the tools that require such exertion, there’s a pneumatic equivalent that will bear the brunt of the task in question. Imagine being able to cut each board and drill each hole evenly and easily in a matter of seconds; it’s all possible with air-powered saws and drills. All you have to do is hold the tool in place and the airpower does the rest — no strained wrists, no overworked shoulders or elbows. Best of all, each application is accomplished so fast that there’s little time to slip or ruin a project.

With a single-stage air compressor, you could power a vast array of woodworking tools that would make it possible to achieve in minutes what would otherwise take hours with old-fashioned hand tools. The kinds of tasks that you could accomplish with a single-stage compressor include the following:

Sawing: Once a woodworking project has been conceived, the first major step involves trimming the boards and cutting out the shapes and panels for use. Historically, woodcutting was a dangerous task, best left to the strong and skilled. But now it’s far easier with a pneumatic speed saw, which can slice through the wood in just a fraction of the time it would take to manually run carbide blades from one board side to another. Air-powered speed saws can be fitted with blades of various lengths for different board thicknesses.

NailingHammering things together can be one of the most awkward and risky parts of any woodworking project. Awkward because a slip of the hand could bend the nail or send it in crooked. Risky because you could also miss the target and hammer your thumb, the board or even the underlying surface. Worst of all, nails often fail to go in all the way, either due to a hard, impenetrable depth or because the nail wasn’t straight in the first place. The solution to these problems is an air-powered nailer, which sends nails in straight and even while penetrating thicknesses without a fuss. Best of all, it will do all of this in seconds, up and down along a given board.

Drilling: Due to the fact that hole formation relies heavily on hand-eye coordination, the act of operating a drill can be just as awkward as hammering a nail. Any wrist or elbow slip could send a drill in crooked or cause the hole to spread too wide for the allotted nuts and bolts. A drill is also a very powerful device, which can be problematic when you fire off-target and send a line of holes off balance. Such risks are greatly reduced with the use of an air-powered drill, which can drill holes through 2x4s faster, and with greater accuracy.

Sanding: After the project is assembled, the raw edges and rough surfaces need to be smoothed out and polished. Sanding makes the difference between raw wood and panel material, but it usually takes machinery to achieve such a transformation. Sure, sandpaper has been around for ages, but the grains of sand usually leave marks or streaks in whichever direction the hand swings. This isn’t appropriate for any piece of wood that a person might use for a chair, cabinet or picture frame. These are the reasons why woodworking requires an orbital pneumatic sander, which moves around in multiple directions for a smooth, streakless finish on all types of wood surfaces.

If woodworking is a trade that’s greatly facilitated by the use of air compressors, work involving metal is virtually impossible without them. As the world’s strongest material, metal is a lot harder to cut, drill, mold and join together. While it’s still possible, though not exactly preferable, to power woodworking tools with your own physical strength, the same cannot be said for metalwork. Simply put, metal crafts require electric or air-powered tools that go above and beyond mere human capabilities.

The following tasks can be performed on metal within seconds with a single-stage compressor and the appropriate pneumatic tools.

Shearing: As conventional wisdom holds, metal alloys must be molded a certain way in order for the finished product to come in a particular shape. What most people don’t know is the power of pneumatic metal-cutting tools. With an air-powered shear, metal workers can cut through sheets of metal in a similar manner to cutting cardboard with a rotary cutter.

GrindingEveryone knows what to do when trimming is needed on wooden sheets and boards, but

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